

Fan options are: Standard Speed, Full Speed, Optimal Speed and Heavy I/O. I got IPMI IP address from bios and used browser to log in. I would hate to have to go back to my consumer frankenstein build.

Please guide me in the right direction about fan control. I search the forum and found discussions about "scripts" and "IPMI" of which I have no knowledge. I looked through the BIOS menus and found no fan control options. Its my guess that the fans can cool my disks when spun up to speed. Since the system fans currently spin slowly and quietly I want to adjust the speed to increase cooling.

I rebooted several times and got similar disk overtemperature warnings. I promptly got disk overheat errors from FreeNAS, even when I replaced the case cover to promote air flow. When I turn on system the 5 big case fans spin up loudly initially and then get rather quiet when Motherboard boots. dual SSD boot drives inside case powered from extra Molex connector from power distributor. I just "finished" moving my FreeNAS from consumer hardware to the server case. This is my first excursion into using server hardware. If they’re connected to the power supply (usually through a Molex connector), there’s no way to control them through software-you’d have to hook them up to a hardware fan controller.Please excuse my inexperience. The fans in your computer can get power in one of two ways: From the motherboard, or directly from your computer’s power supply. Look for RPM settings for your computer fan. Here you will see the “Fan Speed Control” section. Go to “Monitor”, “Status” or something similar named menu. Once you are into Windows 10 BIOS, use the arrow keys on your keyboard to locate “Fan Speed Control” options.

